This is an action upon a policy of accident insurance for $1,500 issued by appellant, it being alleged in the complaint that the assured, John H. Todd, met his death by being accidentally and violently struck and killed by a moving railway train.
Appellant set forth in its answer, as a defense to the action, a clause in the policy providing that in case of accidental death resulting from “unnecessary exposure to danger or obvious risk of injury the limit of defendant’s liability shall be $150,” and •alleged that the assured met his death by unnecessary exposure to danger and to obvious risk of injury.
The issue was tried before and submitted to a jury upon instructions of which appellant does not complain, and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the policy.
Appellant questions the sufficiency of the evidence.
Todd was fireman on a railroad locomotive, and was killed by another moving train about eight o’clock in the evening. His engine was pulling a freight train, and stopped on the side track at a station to let two passenger trains pass. After the last of these trains had passed Todd was found lying on the ground between the two' tracks with his 'head nn the end of a cross-tie of the main track on which the other trains had passed along, and his skull was fractured by a blow of some kind on the head — one witness said on the top and one said on the back of the head. He was unconscious, and died the next day without having regained consciousness. His body was stretched upon the ground at right angle with the track, and was in grass sufficiently high to partially obscure him from view. He was last seen before his injury after the first train had passed and before the last one. No one saw him lie down. The witness who saw him last was the engineer, who was introduced by the defendant and testified that he and Todd separated about twenty minutes before the last train came, and that he (witness) went to the front of his engine and laid down on the pilot where the head brakeman was lying, waiting for the train to pass. He explained that the crew had been working overtime, and were worn out and sleepy. This witness gave two somewhat conflicting depositions in the case. In one deposition he said Todd went back to the caboose for a drink of water, and on his return brought him (witness) a drink, and that he left Todd in the engine when-he went forward to lie down on the pilot. In the other he testified that he (witness) went back to the caboose to get a drink of water and promised to bring Todd a drink on his return, but that the other train passed before he returned, and that as soon as he got back to the engine to pull out he saw Todd lying on the ground with his head on the tie in the injured condition already described.
The conductor and head brakeman both testified to seeing Todd, after the train passed, in the condition described. All three of the witnesses testified that when they first saw Todd he was lying in a natural position as if he was asleep. The conductor testified that the engineer came back to the caboose and told him that Todd had been killed, and he went forward where the latter was lying, and saw that his gloves were under his head. Neither of the other two witnesses referred to the fact of Todd’s gloves being under his head.
Appellant’s theory of the case is that Todd lay down and fell asleep on the ground, with his head resting on the end of the cross-tie, to await the coming of the expected train, and that some part of the engine or train struck his head as it passed along. This conduct on his part is urged as such an “unnecessary exposure to danger or obvious risk of injury” within the meaning of the language of the policy that relieved it from liability.
To combat this theory, the plaintiff introduced as a witness a physician and surgeon of experience who gave his opinion that, if a person was lying down relaxed in sleep, it would be improbable that a moving object could strike his skull a blow with sufficient force to crush it without disturbing the position of the head. On cross-examination he said that it was possible for the head to have been moved by the blow and then to have relaxed into the original position.
The injury to the insured is conceded to have resulted from an accident, and the burden was upon appellant, as insurer, to show that it resulted from such an exposure to danger or risk so as to fall within the exemption from liability prescribed in the policy. The jury found it did not result from such exposure on the part of the assured. Now, can we say that the proof does not warrant such a finding? Are the proved facts such that different conclusions may be drawn therefrom? If so, it is our duty to allow the verdict of the jury to stand. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. Banister, 80 Ark. 190.
It will be seen from the statement of facts already given that no one saw Todd put himself in a place of danger or knew of a certainty that he did so. It was a matter of conjecture that he lay down with his head on the cross-tie. It is possible for him to have received the injury in some other way. Nay, it seems improbable to the ordinary mind that a person familiar with such a danger would consciously expose himself to it so rashly; and, according .to the opinion of the expert who testified on the subject, it is not probable that the injury resulted from such an exposure.
It is unnecessary for us to speculate as to how the accident might have otherwise occurred. It is sufficient if different conclusions may reasonably be drawn from the evidence as to the manner in which the accident occurred — 'whether on account of a danger to which the assured exposed himself unnecessarily or otherwise.
Error of the court is also assigned in the court’s refusal to permit the engineer and brakeman to state their opinion, when asked to do so by appellant’s counsel, to the effect that Todd could not have fallen in the position in which he was found, but must have laid down. Also in refusing to permit the conductor to state his opinion to the effect that the wound in the head of deceased “looked just like it had been made by the pilot beam of the engine.” This court, in the case of Little Rock Traction & Electric Co. v. Nelson, 66 Ark. 494, approved the following statement of the law from the Supreme Court of Massachusetts concerning the conditions upon which the admissibility of non-expert opinion testimony rests: “First, that the subject-matter to which the testimony relates cannot be reproduced or described to the jury precisely as it appeared to the witness at the time; and, second, that the facts upon which the witness is called upon to express his opinion are such as men in general are capable of comprehending.” Commonwealth v. Sturtivant, 117 Mass. 122. And this court added that, “according to this rule, opinion evidence is not admissible when the fact is susceptible of being adequately exhibited to the jury in the ordinary way.” Measured by the rule thus announced, it is plain that the opinion evidence offered in this case was not admissible, and the trial court properly excluded it.
Affirmed.